Brighton condemned Liverpool to their second straight Premier League home defeat on Wednesday night, winning 1-0 to leave the champions with a mountain to climb if they are going to retain their title. Jurgen Klopp’s men appeared to have turned the corner with impressive victories against Tottenham and West Ham after a five-match winless run.
But defeat to lowly Brighton at Anfield leaves them seven points behind leaders Manchester City, who also have a game in hand. Graham Potter’s men executed their gameplan to perfection, snuffing out Liverpool’s dangermen and offering a threat up front.
The only goal of the game came in the 56th minute courtesy of a Steven Alzate strike and Liverpool could not respond. Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson was again drafted into central defence in the absence of any of the club’s senior centre-backs, with new signing Ben Davies on the substitutes’ bench.
Goalkeeper Alisson Becker was absent due to illness, meaning Caoimhin Keller made only his second Premier League appearance. Forward Sadio Mane was also missing from Liverpool’s attack.
Liverpool enjoyed the bulk of possession in the early stages but in-form Brighton were organised at the back and offered a threat on their forays forward. Mohamed Salah had a golden chance to give Liverpool the lead in the opening minutes when he collected a long ball from Henderson.
The Egyptian forward, who scored twice in Liverpool’s 3-1 win at West Ham at the weekend, controlled the ball but put his left-footed shot over the bar. Salah offered an occasional threat down the right but Liverpool looked short of ideas in the final third when faced with the massed blue shirts of Brighton.
The visitors had a chance to take the lead midway through the first half when the ball fell to Dan Burn after Neal Maupay’s shot was blocked but he skied over from close range. Brighton, full of confidence after taking seen points from their past three matches, were hoping to match the heroics of Burnley, who won at Anfield last month.
The visitors showed ambition when they had the chance to get forward, attempting to use their height advantage to full effect. Ben White headed over from a free-kick and Maupay also put a header over in the closing moments of the first half.
Jurgen Klopp’s men went in at half-time having failed to muster a single shot on goal. The second half shaped up like the first, with Liverpool probing but looking short of inspiration. Roberto Firmino had a deflected shot wide but it was Brighton who took the lead with the game’s first shot on target.
Burn, on the left side of the Liverpool area, headed a cross-field ball back across goal and Alzate ran onto it to loop a shot inside the far post. Klopp threw on Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Divock Origi for Georginio Wijnaldum and Xherdan Shaqiri as he sought a way back into the match.
Salah flashed a left-footed shot over after Trent Alexander-Arnold fizzed a ball across the area and Adam Webster produced a superb, muscular challenge to stop the Egypt forward in his tracks. But Brighton were still threating at the other end. Keller saved smartly from Pascal Gross and Leandro Trossard also forced a save. The result lifts Brighton to 15th in the table, 10 points clear of the relegation zone.
Earlier, Manchester City moved three points clear at the top with a 2-0 victory against Burnley. Pep Guardiola’s side had watched Manchester United draw level on points with them on Tuesday after their bitter rivals crushed Southampton 9-0.
But City underlined their determination to hold onto top spot with a composed, mature display at Turf Moor. Gabriel Jesus opened the scoring after a mistake from Burnley keeper Nick Pope and Raheem Sterling grabbed the second before half-time.
Leicester beat struggling Fulham 2-0 to improve their superb away league record. Despite the absence of injured leading scorer Jamie Vardy, Kelechi Iheanacho opened the scoring for Brendan Rodgers’ men and James Justin doubled their lead on the stroke of half-time. Leicester now have eight wins out of 11 on the road, in contrast to their mixed form at the King Power Stadium, where they have suffered five defeats.
Jesse Lingard scored twice on his West Ham debut to clinch a 3-1 victory at Aston Villa. Tomas Soucek opened the scoring after 51 minutes when he latched into Said Benrahma’s pass and drilled into the corner.
Lingard, who signed on loan from Manchester United last week, struck in the 56th minute after a flowing West Ham counter. 
Villa’s Ollie Watkins scored in the 81st minute, but Lingard bagged his second two minutes later as fifth placed West Ham held on for a fifth win in their last six league games.
Dominic Calvert-Lewin got back on the goal trail as sixth placed Everton won 2-1 at Leeds. Calvert-Lewin notched his first goal in eight league games to take his tally for the season to 12 after Gylfi Sigurdsson had given the visitors an early lead. 
Raphinha pulled one back for Leeds soon after the interval, but Everton secured a fourth successive away league win for the first time since 1985.